It’s not a “dictatorship” as falsely claimed by US hardliners and establishment media, reporting the official narrative exclusively, suppressing reality on the ground.

The NYT:

“Venezuela’s government has overseen the destruction of its democracy and its economy…Today, it is nearly a failed state.”

“Public order is collapsing and crime rising…The government is aggressively consolidating power and undermining democratic institutions…Maduro won re-election in May in a vote that has been widely criticized within Venezuela and abroad as rigged.”

“Hugo Chavez waged war on Venezuelan institutions and civil society, hollowing out his country’s democracy…Maduro…rel[ies] on handouts” to preserve his power.”

“Venezuela exhibits the worst-case outcome of populist governance, in which institutions have been so crippled that crime is rampant, corruption is nearly universal and the quality of life has collapsed.”

“Parents…go days without eating, shriveling to the weight of children…Crowds of adults storm dumpsters after restaurants close. Babies die because it is hard to find or afford infant formula, even in emergency rooms.”

The above rubbish was taken from several Times reports, similar ones from other establishment media—a scenario of bald-faced Big Lies and distortion.

Writer John McEvoy visited Venezuela. He arrived in Caracas on March 15 after living in neighboring Colombia for the previous six months, a nation greatly affected by serious humanitarian issues, he said—along with state-sponsored repression by narco-fascist ruling authorities.

“What I’ve found most striking [in Venezuela] is the absence of evidence [of a Western reported] crisis,” said McEvoy, adding, “Key signs of any ‘humanitarian crisis’—including homelessness and violence—actually seem to be less visible here than in some major European cities.”

“[E]veryday life in Caracas wouldn’t look out of place in any Latin American capital: people play football in public parks; weekends see street parties and dancing; children play in public spaces. This has been true of both central areas of the city and its poorer outskirts.”

“Though there is no visible shortage of food here [a manager of a private supermarket stopped me filming its abundance of food], much of it is unaffordable for those earning the minimum monthly wage.”

“Local Provisioning and Production Committees (CLAPs) supply over half of the Venezuelan population with packages of government-subsidized food and basic necessities, and many people engage in the informal economy to supplement their salary.”

Indeed hardships exist because of the Trump regime’s sanctions war over 80% of Venezuelans oppose.

A street vendor told McEvoy the following:

“We’re doing what we can. Everyone’s doing what they can. But look around here. Nobody’s starving. It’s not like what they’re saying in your country [the US, other Western ones, and anti-Maduro regional states].”

Venezuelans “are largely coping.” Bolivarian governance is democratic, not dictatorial as falsely portrayed in the West.

“[N]ormalcy of daily Venezuelan life sits in starker and starker contrast with the extreme representations of the corporate media in the West. If London’s homeless people could see these streets, they’d be appalled that they’re being so shamefully ignored,” McEvoy explained.

Reality on the ground in Venezuela is a world apart from the fabricated Western narrative—all propaganda all the time, supporting the Trump regime’s coup plot.

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